Cinema of the World and Women’s Film Culture: Susanne Bier’s Transnational Cinema

Belinda Smaill
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Chapter 11 employs a feminist lens to situate women filmmakers within a wider global context in which all women’s cinema can be considered to be “world cinema,” set apart from local contexts that fail to encompass women’s film practices in terms of resources, space, and mobility. Advocating a perspective advanced by Patricia White in Women’s Cinema, World Cinema, Belinda Smaill proposes that women filmmakers should be viewed within “whole world approaches” that comprehensively address the context of production, circulation, representation, and image of each director. While tracking the mobility of female directors, Smaill points out that while it is difficult for women to achieve employment as feature directors in the U.S., it is even more difficult to gain access to the industry from outside the U.S. Hollywood is an exclusive domain, making Bier’s transnational American work a critical site for investigation. With Serena, Smaill contends, Bier cements her place as a director who takes on the world by lending her authorial signature to a complex manifestation of world cinema.
世界电影与女性电影文化:苏珊娜·比尔的跨国电影
第11章采用女权主义视角,将女性电影人置于一个更广泛的全球背景下,在这个背景下,所有的女性电影都可以被认为是“世界电影”,与那些在资源、空间和流动性方面未能涵盖女性电影实践的地方背景区分开来。贝琳达·斯梅尔倡导帕特里夏·怀特在《女性电影:世界电影》一书中提出的观点,她提出女性电影人应该用“整个世界的方法”来看待,这种方法全面地解决了每位导演的制作、流通、表现和形象的背景。在追踪女性导演的流动性时,斯莫尔指出,女性在美国很难获得故事片导演的职位,而在美国之外进入这个行业就更难了。好莱坞是一个专属领域,这使得比尔的跨国美国作品成为一个重要的调查场所。斯莫尔认为,在《塞蕾娜》中,比尔巩固了自己作为导演的地位,她通过将自己的作者签名赋予世界电影的复杂表现形式,来承担世界的责任。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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